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Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy
Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy - A blog on conservation, from migratory birds to coral reefs, from rainforests to climate change to personal green technology.
Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy
Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy - A blog on conservation, from migratory birds to coral reefs, from rainforests to climate change to personal green technology.
Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy
Cool Green Science: The Conservation Blog of The Nature Conservancy - A blog on conservation, from migratory birds to coral reefs, from rainforests to climate change to personal green technology.
Mike's Birding & Digiscoping Blog: Winnie and ANWR
Here's a cool story: Winnie the Whimbrel flew to the ANWR...
Winnie the Whimbrel
a supreme shorebird who just flew 3,200 miles (5,000 kilometers) over a span of no more than 146 hours.
Mexico's flamingo flocks dazzle along the Gulf
According to the Nature Conservancy, nearly 90 percent of all the world's pink flamingos migrate to two breeding and nesting grounds: Celestún and and Ría Lagartos, at opposite ends of Mexico's unspoiled northern coastline along the Gulf of Mexico.
Bald eagle: an icon soars off the endangered species list [pics]
Once a powerful symbol of freedom, the bald eagle became an icon of endangered species. But with a little help and an 8-foot wingspan, it’s now soaring back to health. You can call the bald eagle strapping, strong and symbolic -- just don't call it enda
A Mercury Mystery: Monitoring Songbirds for Toxic Mercury
Recent news that a variety of migratory songbirds nesting in forests across New York were found to have elevated mercury levels has surprised many who thought the threat from mercury was confined to aquatic birds and the fish they eat.
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How could "terrestrial" birds, like the diminutive Bicknell’s and wood thrush, which feed on insects and other critters found in leaf litter, accumulate mercury if they did not consume contaminated fish and did not depend on food sources found in ponds or lakes? The culprit? Atmospheric deposition of mercury
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